TREATS! Magazine is a limited edition fine art, printed quarterly. Featuring luxurious and exclusive content by the best photographers, models, stylists, writers and artists.
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L’Officiel Lithuania is the new name of the magazine Express Mada. The most influent fashion magazine in Lithuania now benefits from our “savoir faire” in presenting all the major international trends.
TREATS! Magazine is a limited edition fine art, printed quarterly. Featuring luxurious and exclusive content by the best photographers, models, stylists, writers and artists.
Have you ever looked through the bottom of a glass and watched the world in distortion? It’s Tangent’s mission to take that glass and put it over the world of fashion for you.
Co-founded by fashion photographer Emmanuel Giraud, and fashion stylist Heather Cairns, the magazine was born from their mutual desire to put fashion into a creative context.
Tangent is a playground for people who appreciate fashion as art. It targets people who indulge in their identity and want to discover every secret corner of fashion first.
Tangent entertains with the most unconventional editorials, exclusive content, fashion videos and live stream interviews.
Tangent magazine fuses the hottest international labels with the edgy Australian fashion, to give our readers a potent mix of style to inspire their wardrobes.
Fasten your seat belts and get ready to experience a new direction in fashion.
Vogue is the fashion authority. Setting the standard for over 100 years has made Vogue the best selling fashion magazine in the world. Each issue delivers the latest in beauty, style, health, fitness and celebrities and your subscription will include the must-have Spring and Fall Fashion editions. Before it's in fashion, it's in Vogue!
Vogue was founded as a weekly publication by Arthur Baldwin Turnure in 1892. When he died in 1909, Condé Nast picked it up and slowly began growing the publication. The first change Nast made was that Vogue appeared every two weeks instead of weekly. Nast also went overseas in the early 1910s. He first went to Britain, and started a Vogue there, and it went well. Then he went to Spain, however that was a failure. Lastly, Nast took Vogue to France, and that was a huge success. The magazines number of publications and profit increased dramatically under Nast. The magazine's number of subscriptions surged during the Depression, and again during World War II. In the 1960s, with Diana Vreeland as editor-in-chief and personality, the magazine began to appeal to the youth of the sexual revolution by focusing more on contemporary fashion and editorial features openly discussing sexuality. Vogue also continued making household names out of models, a practice that continued with Suzy Parker, Twiggy, Jean Shrimpton, Lauren Hutton, Veruschka, Marisa Berenson, Penelope Tree, and others.
In 1973, Vogue became a monthly publication. Under editor-in-chief Grace Mirabella, the magazine underwent extensive editorial and stylistic changes to respond to changes in the lifestyles of its target audience.
The current editor-in-chief of American Vogue is Anna Wintour, noted for her trademark bob and her practice of wearing sunglasses indoors. Since taking over in 1988, Wintour has worked to protect the magazine's high status and reputation among fashion publications. In order to do so, she has made the magazine focus on new and more accessible ideas of "fashion" for a wider audience. This allowed Wintour to keep a high circulation while discovering new trends that a broader audience could conceivably afford. For example, the inaugural cover of the magazine under Wintour's editorship featured a three-quarter-length photograph of Israeli super model Michaela Bercu wearing a bejeweled Christian Lacroix jacket and a pair of jeans, departing from her predecessors' tendency to portray a woman’s face alone, which, according to the Times', gave "greater importance to both her clothing and her body. This image also promoted a new form of chic by combining jeans with haute couture. Wintour’s debut cover brokered a class-mass rapprochement that informs modern fashion to this day." Wintour's Vogue also welcomes new and young talent.
Wintour's presence at fashion shows is often taken as an indicator of the designer's profile within the industry. In 2003, she joined the Council of Fashion Designers of America in creating a fund that provides money and guidance to at least two emerging designers each year. This has built loyalty among the emerging new star designers, and helped preserve the magazine's dominant position of influence through what Time called her own "considerable influence over American fashion. Runway shows don't start until she arrives. Designers succeed because she anoints them. Trends are created or crippled on her command."
Intermission is a Stockholm-based quarterly magazine. It's not about celebrity or news factor, but photography and endurign stories.
This new publication targets fashion professionals, giving them an essential guide to quickly and intuitively spot the most commercial trends for the coming season, but also the basics for the next season. Once a trend has been identified, the magazine calls upon an internationally acclaimed designer to interpret the trend, going into detail about its emotional, conceptual and material aspects. Fashion Basix is an innovative interpretation to better understand the impact of the fashion market. Six-monthly issue (May and December)
L’Officiel Singapore is at the intersection of Eastern and Western culture. It presents all the latest trends in luxury and fashion to its cosmopolitan readers.